Fishing down then up the food web of an invaded lake

Analysis of commercial catches reveals a serial depletion of some oceanic fish stocks over time, resulting in fisheries focusing on increasingly smaller species closer to the base of the food chain. This effect, described as fishing down the marine food web, is observed when the trophic level of the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2019-10, Vol.116 (40), p.19995-20001
Hauptverfasser: Dunlop, Erin S., Goto, Daisuke, Jackson, Donald A.
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container_end_page 20001
container_issue 40
container_start_page 19995
container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
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creator Dunlop, Erin S.
Goto, Daisuke
Jackson, Donald A.
description Analysis of commercial catches reveals a serial depletion of some oceanic fish stocks over time, resulting in fisheries focusing on increasingly smaller species closer to the base of the food chain. This effect, described as fishing down the marine food web, is observed when the trophic level of the catch declines over time, raising concerns about the ecosystem impacts of fishing. Freshwater systems also experience harvest, yet do not appear to commonly show the same fishing down response perhaps because time series are too short to witness early depletions, fishing is often recreational, or other factors like stocking and invasive species influence patterns. Here we make use of extensive catch records from Lake Simcoe dating back to the 1860s, to examine if fishing down effects are observed in this highly exploited Canadian inland lake. We measured 2 commonly used indicators from catch data, mean trophic level (MTL) and fishing-in-balance (FiB), and compared trends between a historical period dominated by commercial fishing and a contemporary period when commercial fishing ceased and recreational fishing effort increased. We found a striking difference between the 2 time periods, with MTL (and to some extent FiB) declining during commercial fishing but increasing during recreational fishing. However, indicators either increased or decreased due to invasive species and increased due to stocking. We show that while declining MTL can occur in a freshwater lake, the trajectory can be altered by a switch to recreational fishing, as well as stocking and invasive species.
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subjects Animals
Aquatic ecosystems
Biological Sciences
Biomass
Canada
Commercial fishing
Conservation of Natural Resources
Depletion
Environmental impact
Fisheries
Fishes - physiology
Fishing
Food Chain
Food chains
Food webs
Fresh Water
Freshwater ecosystems
Freshwater fish
Freshwater lakes
Indicators
Introduced Species
Invasive species
Lakes
Nonnative species
Oceans and Seas
Recreation
Seafood
Species Specificity
Sport fishing
Stocking
Trophic levels
title Fishing down then up the food web of an invaded lake
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